|
|
|
| Anonymous User (login or join us) | Upload |
)
)
NEW!64Kbps MP3 ZIP
LibriVox recording of Through the Looking-Glass, by Lewis Carroll. Read by Kara Shallenberg.
In this sequel to "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland", Alice is playing with her kittens — a black kitten and a white kitten, the offspring of Dinah, Alice's cat in the first book — when she ponders what the world is like on the other side of a mirror's reflection... (summary from wikipedia)
For more free audio books or to become a volunteer reader, visit LibriVox.org
This audio is part of the collection: The LibriVox Free Audiobook Collection
It also belongs to collections: Audio Books & Poetry; Community Audio
Artist/Composer: Lewis Carroll
Date: 2010-07-04
Source: Librivox recording of a public-domain text
Keywords: librivox; audiobooks; children; fantasy; adventure; carroll; fiction
Creative Commons license: Attribution 3.0
| Audio Files | 128Kbps MP3 | Ogg Vorbis | 64Kbps MP3 |
| 01 Looking-Glass House |
17.3 MB
|
12.3 MB
|
8.7 MB
|
| 02 The Garden of Live Flowers |
16.3 MB
|
11.7 MB
|
8.1 MB
|
| 03 Looking-Glass Insects |
17.1 MB
|
12.4 MB
|
8.5 MB
|
| 04 Tweedledum and Tweedledee |
17.2 MB
|
12.5 MB
|
8.6 MB
|
| 05 Wool and Water |
17.0 MB
|
12.6 MB
|
8.5 MB
|
| 06 Humpty Dumpty |
18.8 MB
|
13.4 MB
|
9.4 MB
|
| 07 The Lion and the Unicorn |
15.5 MB
|
11.1 MB
|
7.7 MB
|
| 08 It's My Own Invention |
22.7 MB
|
16.1 MB
|
11.4 MB
|
| 09 Queen Alice |
24.5 MB
|
17.4 MB
|
12.3 MB
|
| 10 Shaking; 11 Waking; 12 Which Dreamed It |
5.0 MB
|
3.5 MB
|
2.5 MB
|
| Information | Format | Size |
| looking-glass_1007_files.xml | Metadata | [file] |
| looking-glass_1007_meta.xml | Metadata | 1.4 KB |
| looking-glass_1007_reviews.xml | Metadata | 1.1 KB |
| Other Files | Unknown | ItemBitTorrent |
| looking-glass_1007.json |
9.9 KB
|
|
| looking-glass_1007_files.xml |
5.9 KB
|




Reviewer:
ListeninginChicago -




Subject:
Excellent reading
Kara Schallenberg gives us an excellent reading of Through the Looking Glass, complete with several quite famous nonsense poems, including Jabberwocky
"’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe."
and The Walrus and the Carpenter
"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes—and ships—and sealing-wax—
Of cabbages—and kings—
And why the sea is boiling hot—
And whether pigs have wings."
Carroll has quite an imagination to come up with this bizarre story - you never know what is going to come next!